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Old 10-14-16 | 05:17 PM
  #26  
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Originally Posted by Milton Keynes
I stream audio from my radios over the internet, so if I want to I can run shortwave or scanner audio online and listen to it on my phone as I ride. I am a ham and can take a little Baofeng HT along on my bike, but there's not a lot of VHF/UHF ham activity around here any more.

I've got to get my wire antenna back up since it came down in the storm so I can listen to pirates, but most likely I'll be taking the kiddos out trick-or-treating.
I pretty much gave up on outdoor wire antennas. My last one was really good, a partial wavelength 40m vertical loop that was hidden inside a wooden fence. Cheap too -- just magnet wire, an impedance transformer and TV coaxial cable feedline. Very quiet considering the usual RFI. But my apartment complex maintenance crew always find them and tear 'em down. It doesn't violate any lease agreement and technically a ham operator must be permitted to be able to use some sort of outdoor antenna. But the language and cultural barriers defied all my efforts and reaching a compromise with the apartment management and maintenance staff. So I'll toss up a temporary antenna some weekends and holidays, or just go outdoors with a portable.

BTW, you don't even need to be home or awake for shortwave or pirate broadcasts. There are freely accessible SDRs online, many with options to record to your computer hard drive. The SDRs are scattered worldwide so it's fun to see how a broadcast is propagating.

Sometimes I'll run an audio patch cord from my receiver to my PC's audio in port and set a recorder to run for hours. Later I'll go back and see if I caught any broadcasts. With a graph it's easy to spot the transmissions as long as the local RFI isn't too bad.
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Old 10-14-16 | 06:02 PM
  #27  
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Originally Posted by canklecat
I pretty much gave up on outdoor wire antennas. My last one was really good, a partial wavelength 40m vertical loop that was hidden inside a wooden fence. Cheap too -- just magnet wire, an impedance transformer and TV coaxial cable feedline. Very quiet considering the usual RFI. But my apartment complex maintenance crew always find them and tear 'em down. It doesn't violate any lease agreement and technically a ham operator must be permitted to be able to use some sort of outdoor antenna. But the language and cultural barriers defied all my efforts and reaching a compromise with the apartment management and maintenance staff. So I'll toss up a temporary antenna some weekends and holidays, or just go outdoors with a portable.

BTW, you don't even need to be home or awake for shortwave or pirate broadcasts. There are freely accessible SDRs online, many with options to record to your computer hard drive. The SDRs are scattered worldwide so it's fun to see how a broadcast is propagating.

Sometimes I'll run an audio patch cord from my receiver to my PC's audio in port and set a recorder to run for hours. Later I'll go back and see if I caught any broadcasts. With a graph it's easy to spot the transmissions as long as the local RFI isn't too bad.
My random wire goes between two trees, and has a lead in which is fed to a 9:1 balun and then coax to the house. I hope to fix it this weekend if I get over my head cold. I guess I do have my multiband inverted V but it's not quite as sensitive as the wire.

I tend to listen with my SDR and am able to see all the signals active in the range where pirates operate these days. I really love using the SDR, makes it quite easy to find active stations.
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Old 10-14-16 | 06:45 PM
  #28  
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Originally Posted by indyfabz
Heh. I bought on of those in '86 as well.
was that black and yellow with DA components? I remember my cousin got a new Panasonic and I parked my old Schwinn Traveller when he gave me his Paramount
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Old 10-15-16 | 07:26 AM
  #29  
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Originally Posted by keg61
was that black and yellow with DA components?
Uh...No. Pretty low end. IIRC, it even had suicide levers.
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